Another three hours sacrificed to Mount Doom on Lake Washington
Last night, the Windows machine in the library decided, mysteriously, to reboot several times Aaaand to have the event service report that it was repairing a stack of broken system programs up until the point where the event log reported that the autorepair script was turned off.
So, I brought out the nuclear devices and decided to clean the network up for once and for all, since it looked like one of the local script kiddies had found Pete and was having a little fun driving me to the point of homicide. After
- flipping the whole network over to a private network (and setting up dhcp+named to do windows-style dynamic dns, which was not particularly fun because the ISC couldn't write legible documentation even if their lives depended on it), and
- putting what I'll call "wireless security" on the wireless network,
Here's what I spent three hours doing
- booting the windows CD (at 9:55pm)
- formatting the system disk
- loading the boot software onto the system disk
- reboot
- accepting a license
- installing the rest of windows 2000 onto the system disk
- reboot
- clean up icons, hide IE and **tl**k
- accept the license for the wireless ethernet
- install the "windows installer" for the wireless ethernet
- reboot
- accept the license for the XML parser for the wireless ethernet
- install the XML parser for the wireless ethernet
- accept the license for DirectX 9 for the wireless ethernet
- install DirectX 9 for the wireless ethernet
- reboot
- accept the license for the wireless ethernet driver
- install the wireless ethernet driver
- configure the wireless ethernet for the new "secure" wireless network
- accept the license for updates to the wireless ethernet driver
- install the updates to the wireless ethernet driver
- accept the license for Norton Antivirus
- install Norton AV
- run Norton Liveupdate
- reboot
- run Norton Liveupdate again
- reboot
- run Norton Liveupdate again
- reboot
- run Norton Liveupdate one more time
- accept the license for Palm Desktop
- install Palm Desktop
- reboot
- install FrameMaker
- install, s l o w l y, the software for the HP 940 printer
- accept the license for the Nero cd burning software
- install the Nero cd burning software
- reboot
- install the software for our ancient Vivitar scanner
- reboot
- install Quicken
- reboot
- clean up the desktop
- accept the license for
Phoenixfirefox - install firefox
- clean up the desktop
- install firefox extensions
- join the local domain
- reboot
- scan for hardware (to detect the audio hardware)
- install Irfanview and plugins
- install PuTTY
- install Foobar 2000
- install Nero burnrights
- reboot
- install achron
- install and accept the license for 9 additional microsoft fonts
- reboot (yes! The microsoft fonts require a reboot after they're installed)
- run windows update to pick up updates (but not any of their service packs)
- reboot
- and finally log in as a real user at 12:38
Yes, that's 15 reboots and 17 licenses. Windows may be prettier than MacOS and and of the Unix desktops, but jesus it's a pain to install. And after all this installation has gone on, firewombar doesn't seem to want to open multiple windows anymore, so I'll have to go back in and see what's going wrong there.
It probably won't require more than one full reinstall and 30 reboots.
Comments
Windows is "prettier" than OS X? ok, that's a matter of taste I guess.
no modern OS should require all those restarts, though. how 1998.
Well, first I'll qualify by saying that I'm not talking about windows XP; the first thing I do with windows XP when I have to use it is to flip it over to the Windows 95/95/NT/2000 compatability mode. The Windows 99N2 interface isn't very cluttered, and I like uncluttered interfaces. The MacOS desktop, with the topbar being attached to the foreground process (and, in MacOS 10, that annoying dock at the bottom) is too "surprising" for my tastes; I prefer to have the big screen just be the window manager (not surprising to someone who used X windows for 10 years) and to have all the programs sit quietly in their little windows.
In the grand scheme of things, it's not enough to stop me from getting a teeny tiny powermac (the lack of framemaker -- Adobe can bite me -- and the $1000 studio display or $??? adapter box to connect the SGI 1600sw to the ttpm are the primary constraints), but I do think the software is prettier.
Comments are closed
Actually, no, it didn't take a reinstall. All it took was deleting julie's profile directory and letting Pete generate a new one.
I'm beginning to believe that the essential tool for system administration on modern Unix and windows machines is the rm command, used liberally when something isn't working properly.
For extra credit, things can be backed up, but it's not essential.